Read this poem of the day by Patricia Smith, an African American poet, teacher, and performance artist at this link on Poets.org.
April 30 African American Historical Events
Today in Black History – April 30 *
1864 – A regiment captures a rebel battery after fighting
rearguard action. Six infantry regiments check rebel
troops at Jenkins’ Ferry, Saline River, Arkansas. The
troops are so enraged by atrocities committed at Poison
Spring two weeks earlier, that the Second Kansas Colored
Volunteers went into battle shouting, “Remember Poison
Spring!”
1931 – William Lacy Clay is born in St. Louis, Missouri. He will
become a congressman from Missouri and chairman of the
Post Office and Civil Service Committee.
1940 – Jesse E. Moorland joins the ancestors in Washington, DC.
He was a clergyman, key force in fund-raising for African
American YMCAs, alumnus and trustee of Howard University.
The donation of his substantial private library to Howard
forms the basis of the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
on the university’s campus.
1961 – Isiah Lord Thomas is born in Chicago, Illinois. One of
nine children raised by a single mother, Thomas will become
a basketball star, first for Indiana University and later
for the Detroit Pistons, where he will lead the team to
1989 and 1990 NBA championships.
1983 – Robert C. Maynard becomes the first African American to gain
a controlling interest in a major metropolitan newspaper
when he buys the Oakland Tribune from Gannett.
1994 – The counting of ballots begins in South Africa’s first all-
race elections.
1994 – Some 100,000 men, women and children fleeing ethnic slaughter
in Rwanda cross into neighboring Tanzania.
Information retrieved from the Munirah Chronicle and is edited by Rene’ A. Perry.